Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Continuing medical education (aka CME) is a requirement for physician recertification, and there are many different means to obtain it, including online. Medscape is probably the largest online CME provider and by means of smart phone and tablet applications, email reminders and just plain old web visits, it undoubtedly services thousands of physicians daily.

So let me ask you, if you're a physician and you're using Medscape to try to stay at least partially up to date with the latest literature, and you inherently trust Medscape as a reputable source of quick, expertly vetted information, how frustrating might it be to learn that at least in regard to nutrition, Medscape doesn't know what it's talking about?

Well, I've got bad news for you.

Looking at the 3 most recent observational study failures, where the studies were so poor as to make conclusions impossible, 2 of the 3 made it to Medscape as CME exercises, and one was put out in their news to family physicians segment.

Of the 3, the worst was probably the chocolate study which frankly never should have been published.

And what did Medscape do with the study?

It included it in their CME program where their learning points included the erroneous and downright irresponsible "clinical implication", that,

"Greater frequency of chocolate intake is associated with lower BMI, but the amount of chocolate intake is not associated with BMI"

And then to hammer this erroneous information home they include that very statement in their CME required post-test,

I do feel badly publicly bashing a free service, but know that I tried the quiet route first. Following Medscape's inclusion of the diet soda study in their family practice newsletter, I wrote to them to express my concerns. I never did hear back from them and certainly no correction was ever sent out.

While Medscape in theory is a fabulous service, if their understanding of other areas of medicine is on par with their understanding of nutrition, in practice they're putting patients at risk by actively misinforming their physicians. Given I have no reason to think otherwise I'm going to err on the side of caution and assume the same lack of care, attention and critical appraisal they're paying nutrition is their norm.

The solution?

Stop using their services or simply assume that their take on medical literature isn't in any way, shape or form, critical, thoughtful or helpful.

Subscribe via Email

About Me

Family doc, Assistant Prof. at the University of Ottawa, Author of The Diet Fix, and founder of Ottawa's non-surgical Bariatric Medical Institute - a multi-disciplinary, ethical, evidence-based nutrition and weight management centre. Nowadays I'm more likely to stop drugs than start them. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.

Creative Commons License

Disclaimer

Any medical discussion on this page is intended to be of a general nature only. This page is not designed to give specific medical advice. If you have a medical problem you should consult your own physician for advice specific to your own situation. The mission of this blog is to provide readers with critical appraisals of nutrition and weight related claims, products and policies so as to allow readers to make more informed decisions in those areas.

The author will not post anything related to any of his patients personal medical histories or circumstances without their explicit written permission.

No personal information is collected by this website. If you'd like to leave a comment on an article, you can do so on this blog's Facebook page.

This site is hosted free of charge by Google's Blogger platform and is intended not only for allied health professionals but also for interested members of the general public.

If you have any concerns feel free to email me at yonifreedhoff [{@}] gmail dot . com